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Scholarship of Teaching and Learning

Asynchronous Discussion and Communication Patterns in Online and Hybrid History Courses

Pages 355-364 | Received 19 Jun 2005, Published online: 03 Feb 2007
 

Abstract

Asynchronous online discussion has been shown to enhance communication between students and to elicit many cognitive indicators. Nevertheless, historians have often been reluctant to make use of such instructional technology. Students enrolled in a fully online world civilization course corroborated qualitative research findings regarding the cognitive indicators associated with asynchronous discussion. In contrast, students in face-to-face web-enhanced hybrid world civilization classes exhibited less dramatic cognitive indicators in asynchronous discussion, perhaps due to the greater maturity in terms of age and experience of the fully online students. Students in the hybrid class, however, did indicate that participation in online discussions enhanced their engagement in face-to-face in-class discussions. However, asynchronous discussions did not prompt the face-to-face students to achieve authentic dialog between students in the classroom, and neither group managed to transcend problems of inequitable participation in small groups. There remains a need for further research on how to transplant documented advantages of asynchronous discussion into the hybrid classroom.

Notes

1. Portions of this analysis are adapted from Vess (Citation2004).

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Deborah L. Vess

Deborah L. Vess (PhD, 1991, University of North Texas) is professor in the Department of History, Geography, and Philosophy at Georgia College & State University. She was a fellow in the Carnegie Academy for Scholarship of Teaching and Learning from 1999 to 2000

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